Compensation and Benefits
Special Minimum Wage for Youth
$4.25/hour
Child Labor Permissable jobs
18+ - Any job, 16-17 - any non-hazardous job; limited driving, 14-15 May work outside of school in non-manufacturing, non-mining, non-hazardous jobs.
Federal Minimum Wage
7.25/Hour. Tipped employees may be paid $2.13/hour as long as wages plus tips equals at lease minimum wage.
Benefit
A collection of non-cash compensation elements, including but not limited to income protection, health coverage, retirement savings, vacation and income supplements for employees, provided in whole or in part by employer payments
Benefits needs analysis
A comprehensive review of all employee benefits
Garnishment
A court order to take part of a person's wages, before he/she gets them, and apply the amount take to pay a debt owed to a creditor
Cash Balance Plan
A defined benefit plan in which the employer contributes a percentage of current pay to an employee's pension plan each year; the employee earned interest on this amount and may receive a lump sum payment if leaves the organization
Roth 401 (k)
A defined contribution plan allowing employees to defer income by making after-tax contributions to a retirement account
401(k) Plan
A defined contribution plan allowing employees to defer income by making pretax contributions to a retirement account. The plan my also allow for employer matching contributions.
Pay grade
A group of jobs of the same or similar value used for compensation purposes
Preferred Provider Organization (PPO)
A health care delivery system in which the employer of insurer enters into contracts with health care providers (physicians, hospitals, etc.), to provide heath care services t a discount
Serious health condition
A health condition that requires either impatient care or continuing treatment by a health care provider
Point of Service Plan (POS)
A health plan that allows the member to pay little or nothing if they stay within the established delivery system, but permits members to receive services from health providers outside the plan if they are willing to pay higher co-payments, deductibles and possibly monthly premiums
Benchmark Job
A job that is commonly defined, used to make pay comparisons, either within the organization or to comparable jobs outside the organization. Pay data for these jobs is readily available in published surveys
Salary (Pay) Survey
A method of collecting compensation data for workers performing similar jobs in other organizations
Bonus
A onetime amount received or paid in addition to the regular wage or salary
Draw
A payroll advance repaid by future commissions earned by the sales employee
Maturity Curve
A process of determining employees' salaries as a function of experience. It assumes that years in a profession equate with more highly valued competencies.
Keogh Plan
A qualified retirement plan for self-employed individuals
Individual retirement account (IRA)
A retirement account that allows individuals to make tax-deferred contributions to a personal retirement fund
Non-contributory plan
A retirement or benefit plan in which the employer makes all contributions
Pension Plans
A retirement plan established by a corporation or organization to provide income for its employees when they retire
Defined-contribution plan
A retirement plan in which the employee and/or the employer contributes. Employees are usually responsible for choosing investments in these accounts, and income taxes are deferred until the proceeds are withdrawn after age 59 1/2.
Long Term Disability (LTD)
A significant period of disability generally ranging from six months to life
Salary Compression
A situation that occurs when longer-term employees in a job earn less than new hires for the same job. A salary inequity problem usually caused by inflation.
Managed Care
A system that delivers cost effective health care through monitoring and recommending utilization of services
Job Evaluation
A systematic process for establishing the relative value/worth of jobs within an organization (internal equity)
Money Purchase Plan
A type of defined contribution plan in which the employer makes fixed, regular contributions for participants, usually a percentage of total pay; employees may also make voluntary contributions. At retirement, the accumulated funds are used to provide annuities or lump sum distributions
Health Savings Account (HSA)
A type of flexible spending account that reimburses the employee for out-of-pocket medical expenses; part of a flexible benefit plan
Green-circled employee
A worker paid below the range set for the job
Seniority
A workers length of service with an employer relative to the length of service of other workers.
Hardship Allowance
Additional compensation for expatriates assigned to locations with difficult living and working conditions
Age
Adjusting all salary survey data to the same date
Leveling
Adjusting salary survey data to better fit your job requirements (subjective)
Red Circle Employee
An employee paid above the range set for the job
Defined-benefit plan
An employer's promise to pay a fixed amount each year at retirement. Regardless of the rate of inflation, employees will receive a pre-determined amount.
Compensable factor
An essential, compensate element of a job such as skills, effort, responsibility, and working conditions
Gainsharing
An incentive plan in which groups of employees receive awards based on increased profits, productivity or efficiency
Differential piece-rate system
An individual pay plan in which employees are paid one piece-rate wage for units produced up to a standard output and higher piece-rate wage for units produced over the standard
Workers Compensation
An insurance program, paid for by the employer, designed to protect employees from expenses incurred for a work-related injury or illness
Health Care Reimbursement Account (HRA)
An option under a flexible benefits plan. Expense paid for uninsured medical or heal care services such as vision, hearing, and dental care (deductibles, co-payments/coinsurance, exams for example) are reimbursed by the employer o a non taxable basis provided IRS rules are met.
Health Maintenance Organization (HMO)
An prepaid health plan delivering comprehensive care to members through designated providers, having a fixed monthly payment for health care services, and requiring members to be in a plan for a specified period of time (usually 1 year)
Overtime
Any hours worked over 40 in a workweek. Non-exempt employees are eligible. For overtime pay
Lump Sum Increase (LSI)
Any increase in pay that is made in the form of a single cash payment
Compa-ratio
Base pay divided by the midpoint of the salary range
Competencies
Basic employee characteristics/behaviors that may enhance individual or teach performance
Cost of Living Allowance (COLA)
Basing annual salary increases on the Consumer Price Index (CPI)
Independent Contractor Requirements
Behavioral - Does the company control or have the right to control what the worker does and how the worker does his or her job? Financial - Are the business aspects of the worker's job controlled by the payer (these include things like how worker I️ paid, whether expenses are reimbursed, who provides tools/supplies)? Type of Relationship - Are there written contracts or employee benefits? Will the relationship continue and is the work performed a key aspect of the business.
Paid time-off (PTO) Plan
Benefit plan combining paid sick leave, vacation time and holidays
Vesting
Benefit plan provision that guarantees that participants will, after meeting certain requirements, retain a right to the benefits they have accrued
Flexible Benefit Plans (Examples)
Cafeteria plans, Flexible Spending Accounts, Health Reimbursement Accounts, Health Savings Accounts
Broadbanding
Combining salary grades and ranges into a few wide levels, each containing a relatively wide range of jobs and salary levels
Total Rewards
Compensation (direct pay), benefits, and the work experience (intangible rewards)
Merit (or Pay for Performance) Pay
Compensation increase based on individual employee's past effort and performance
Balance-sheet approach
Compensation package for international assignments that equalizes the cost differences between the host country and the home country
Walsh-Healy Public Contracts Act
Contractors with government contracts over $10,000 for supplies, equipment, and material must pay workers prevailing wage rates
Service Contract Act
Contractors with government service contracts over $2,500 must pay workers prevailing wage rates
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC)
Created by ERISA. Insurance program that guarantees payment of basic retirement benefits to participants if a plan is terminated; may also terminate seriously underfunded pension plans.
Prevailing Wage Laws
Davis-Bacon Act - Construction projects over $2,000, Walsh-Healy Public Contract Act - Supplies, equipment materials, over $10,000, McNamara-O'Hara Service Contract Act - Services over $2,500., Defense Authorization Bill (1986) - Federal contractors may pay overtime after 40 hour week instead of 8 hour day
Retirement Benefits
Defined Benefit plans, Defined contribution plans, Vesting, ERISA and IRS
Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)
Eligible employees receive up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave for: 1) suffering or recovering from a "serious health condition"; 2) the birth of a child; 3) adoption of a child; 4) to care for an immediate family member
Cafeteria Plan (Section 125)
Employee benefit plan that allows employees to select among the various group life, medical expense, disability, dental, and other plans that best meet their specific needs
Non-Qualified Plan
Employee benefit plans that do not adhere to strict IRS standards, cover only select groups of employees, and don' receive favorable tax treatment
Mandated Benefits
Employee benefits that employers must provide by law
Competency Based Pay
Employee pay based on characteristics/behaviors or increased job knowledge
403(b) plan
Employee retirement account, similar to a 401(k), for public employees
Co-Payment
Employee's portion of the cost of insurance premiums and/or medical care
Exempt employees
Employees not entitled to overtime pay under the Fair Labor Standards Act; positions classified as executive, administrative, professional or outside sales
Non-Exempt Employees
Employees who are covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act minimum wage and overtime provisions. These employees are typically paid hourly
Split-Dollar Plan
Employer and executive share the cost of the executive's enhanced life insurance premium
Voluntary Benefits
Employer provided benefits that are not mandated by law
Employee Assistance Programs (EAP)
Employer provided counseling or other services to help employees cope with work or personal problems that may interfere with job performance
Davis-Bacon Act
Employers with federal construction contracts must ay laborers and mechanics the prevailing wages of the majority of the workers in the same area
Golden Parachute
Enhanced severance pay if executive loses position through merger or acquisition
Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) 1938
Establishes a minimum wage, overtime provisions, and child labor; applies to most non-managerial employees in private industry
Utilization review
Evaluation of the necessity, appropriateness and efficiency of the use of medical services and facilities
Benefit Laws
FMLA, ERISA, COBRA, HIPAA
Improshare
Gainsharing based on increases in productivity of the standard hour output of work teams.
Nursing Mothers FSLA
Guarantees "reasonable" unpaid breaks to nursing mothers who need time to express milk. Also requires employers to provide a private place for mothers, othe than a bathroom, for up to one year after a nursing child's birth.
Managed Care Plans
HMO, PPO, POS
Women's Health and Cancer Rights Act (1998)
If a group health plan or health insurance issuer covers mastectomies, then the plan is required to cover breast reconstruction surgery in connection with a mastectomy
Rucker Plan
Incentive bonus plan based on the relationship between the total earnings of hourly employees and the increased production by the employees
Scanlon Plan
Incentive bonus plan using employee committees to achieve cos-reduction improvements. A formula determines the employee's share of cost savings.
Earnings-at-Risk Incentive Plan
Incentive pay plan that puts a portion of the worker's base pay at risk, while also allowing the opportunity to earn more above base pay if goals are met or exceeded
Straight Piece-Rate System
Individual incentive plan in which pay is determined by multiplying the number of units produced by the rate for one unit
Piece-Rate System
Individual incentive plan where workers re paid for each unit produced based on a predetermined standard
Independent Contractors
Individuals who contract with employers to perform specific projects or tasks; they are not employees of the organization
Key-Person Insurance
Insurance intended to cover an organization's cost if a top executive should die
Hay Profile Method
Job evaluation method using knowledge, mental activity, and accountability to evaluate executive and managerial positions
Factor Comparison System
Job evaluation system in which the evaluation process is accomplished on a factor-by-factor basis by developing a factor comparison scale
Job Classification System
Job evaluation system where jobs are classified according to a series of predetermined salary grades
Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA)
Law providing government protection of pensions for all employees with company pension plans
Goals of Compensation Plan
Linked to strategic goals, Internally equitable, externally competitive, efficient to administer
Consumer Price Index (CPI)
Measurement of the average change in a fixed "market basket" of goods and services over time
Tax Equalization Allowance
Method used to ensure that expatriates pay no more than the amount of assumed home country taxes
Exempt Status
Minimum salary test $455/week, Super salary test - over $100,000/year
Employees with more than one pay rate
Must average pay rates during pay period to determine base for overtime pay
Ranking
Non-Qualitative (whole job) job evaluation method of placing each jo in order of relative worth to the organization
Lag Policy
Organization intentionally sets pay structures and targets pay levels below the market rate
Match Policy
Organization pay policy is to set pay structures and targets pay levels to match the market rate
Lead Policy
Organizational intentionally sets pay structures and targets pay levels above the market rate
Differential Pay
Pay in addition to base pay for special work circumstances
Variable Pay
Pay tied to productivity or some measure that can vary with the firm's profitability
Shift Differential
Paying a premium to employees working less desirable shifts
Wages
Payments to employees based on hours or days worked.
Salary Reduction Simplified Employee Pension Plan (SARSEP)
Pension plan that allows employees of companies with 25 employees or less to deter taxation on a portion of their income be making voluntary contributions. Permitted under the Tax Reform Act of 1986
Blackout Period
Period of time when plan participants cannot make investment changes, obtain loans, or take distributions from their plan account. Typical blackouts last 4-6 weeks.
Fiduciary
Person placed in a position of trust confidence expected to exercise a standard of care in administering or managing the assets of others
Flexible spending account
Plan that allows employees to contribute pretax dollars to purchase additional benefits
Flexible benefits plan
Plan that permits employees to choose the benefits they prefer from several benefits offered by the employer
Employee stock ownership plan (ESOP)
Profit sharing plan that gives employees shares of stock in the company; designed to increase employee's effort, commitment ad loyalty since they have a stake in the organization's success
Consolidated Omnibus. Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA)
Provides for temporary continuation of group health coverage, at group rates, that otherwise might be terminated
Social Security Act (1935)
Provides retirement, disability, and health insurance for retired persons and those unable to work
Qualified Plan
Qualified under the IRS Code to receive favorable tax treatment; employee contributions to the plan are tax deferred until retireemt, and employer contributions are tax deductible
Point Methond
Quantitative job evaluation system that assigns points to each job to determine its relative worth
Organizational Incentives
Rewards employees for the performance to the entire organization
Skill Based Pay
Rewards employees for the range, depth, and types of skills they are capable of using. Also called Pay-For Knowledge or Multiskilled pay.
Individual Incentieves
Rewards for individual effort and performance; piece-rate systems, individual bonuses, sales commissions
Straight Commission Plan
Sales compensation based only on a percentage of each sale
Combined Salary and Commission Plan
Sales compensation plan that includes straight salary and a commission
Silver Parachute
Severance benefit for mid-level managers in the event they lose their job through a merger or acquisition. Not as "rich" a benefit as olden parachutes.
Perquisites (Perks)
Special benefits—usually noncash items—for executives.
Team Incentive Plan
Team members share on incentive bonus when production standards are met or exceeded; commonly used in gain sharing plans
Market Differential
Temporarily paying above the pay range for a certain hard to fill jobs
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (SOX)
The Act that encourages the disclosure by an employee of confidential employer information, to a government agency, in a publicly traded organization, that may violate federal securities law or an law meant to prevent fraud against shareholders or employees
Portability
The ability to transfer pension rights and credits when.a worker changes jobs
Base Pay
The basic compensation for a specified position of employment excluding any other payments or allowances
Qualifying Event
The conditions that require offering continued medical coverage under the COBRA
Job Specifications
The knowledge, skills, and abilities (KSAs) an individual needs to perform a job satisfactorily
Prevailing Wage
The minimum wage to be paid to employees working on federal contracts or subcontracts. The wage is determined by the wage paid to other workers in the area.
Profit Sharing
The payment of a portion of company profits to employees as a performance incentive in addition to their regular compensation
Equity
The perceived fairness regarding what an individual does and what is received.
Commission
The percentage of the selling price that is paid to a. Sales employee as all or part of compensation
Job Analisis
The process of determining the skills and duties required of a job
Pay Range
The range of pay rates (from minimum to maximum set for a pay grade. Used to set individual pay rates
Market Line
The relationship between job value, as determined by job evaluation joints and pay survey rates shown on a graph
Stock Option
The right of employees to buy company stock, usually at a discounted price
Pay Equity
The similarity of pay for job requiring comparable levels of knowledge, skills and abilities
Regression Analsis
The statistical technique of finding a straight line that approximates the information in a group of data points
Wage and Salary Survey
The survey of wages paid by other employers in the relevant labor market
Adverse selection
The tendency of persons with poorer than average health expectations (higher risk) to apply for a continue insurance coverage to a greater extent than persons with average or better-than-average health expectations (lesser risk). Also known as anti-selection.
Salary
The total amount regularly paid to an individual regardless of number of hours worked
Compensable Time
Time spent by employees performing work-related tasks
Compensatory time off
Time spent by employees performing work-related tasks
Entitlement Philosophy
Traditional compensation philosophy that gives automatic salary increases based on seniority
Indemnity Plans
Traditional fee-for service group health plans, the patient chooses whichever doctor and hospital he/she wants to use
Contributory Plan
Type of pension plan in which both employees and the employer contribute
Market Price
Typical wage paid for a job in the immediate labor market
Managing Health Care Costs
Utilization Review, Pre-Authorization, Reasonable and customary, Second opinions, Wellness programs, Adverse selection
Waivers
Voluntary agreement between an employee and employer waiving the employer of certain obligations
Portal to Portal Act 1947 Guidelines
Waiting and on-call time - not paid unless it restricts the employee's activities, Rest and meal periods - 10 minutes or less counted as time worked, 30 minutes or more usually unpaid, Training time - paid if employer requires the training, unpaid if voluntary on employee's own time, Travel time - Paid if on the job travel between work sites, unpaid if commuting to and from work, Paid if one day assignment to another city - may deduct time employee would normally commute to the regular work site. Travel away from home (overnight) Work day paid including travel time during work day, Travel outside of work day is unpaid, However, work performed while traveling is paid.
Job Description
Written duties and responsibilities of a job